If They Give You Lined Paper, Write The Other Way
gojomoso wrote:if your just buying it depends
if your going to hold them for 1-5 years before you sell them then offer 1.4 at high quantities
but i would say if you wanted to sell them quickly buy them only for 1.25ish
otherwise just sort with a machine, its cheaper, faster, and you have a larger profit margin than trying to buy/sell
tinhorn wrote:1.4 in 50# lots, delivered.
Crescendo wrote:gojomoso wrote:if your just buying it depends
if your going to hold them for 1-5 years before you sell them then offer 1.4 at high quantities
but i would say if you wanted to sell them quickly buy them only for 1.25ish
otherwise just sort with a machine, its cheaper, faster, and you have a larger profit margin than trying to buy/sell
I mean literally you buy at X and turn it around to sell at Y.
Think like you are the retailer purchasing from a wholesaler.
TheJonasCollegeFund wrote:tinhorn wrote:1.4 in 50# lots, delivered.
How many you got?
biglouddrunk wrote:The problem we face in selling copper is high supply low demand. I personally can get 1.5X after fees pretty easy on ebay. I however am holding onto most I sort because that is not a high enough premium. The supply will not go down much so I am holding out because I think demand in the future will increase. It's my opinion that pennies will pay a higher return than CD's or other ultra safe investments.
Centsation wrote:I'm in the same boat as you biglouddrunk. CDs and similarly safe investments such as savings accounts are only paying between 1-3% right now. Those rates are nowhere near enticing enough to where I'm just going to throw my money in them with such measly returns. Although copper pennies aren't commanding a huge premium right now because they're still in relative abundance in circulation, I feel that within the next 10 years they will become as scarce as silver coins in circulation are today. At that point, and if copper prices continue to climb like they have been recently, I bet we will start to see copper pennies selling closer to their melt value. Selling $10,000 FV of pennies for $40-50k ten years from now sounds a lot better to me than selling them for 1.5 - 2.0x FV today
tinhorn wrote:TheJonasCollegeFund wrote:tinhorn wrote:1.4 in 50# lots, delivered.
How many you got?
That's the price I'd BUY at. The average price I sell at is $3.88 a pound, and ya gotta get in line.
Sheikh_yer_Bu'Tay wrote:"and ya gotta get in line." Awesome, Tinhorn!
tinhorn wrote: If I was dealing in tonnage, my attitude would be different, I'm sure. (But what if those tons were being moved in one- and two-pound bags....)
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